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How long is the interval between the onset and the initial management of bipolar disorder? A meta-analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

G. De Girolamo
Affiliation:
Saint John of God Clinical Research Center, Psychiatric Epidemiology and Evaluation Unit, Brescia, Italy
G. Signorini
Affiliation:
IRCCS St John of God Clinical Research Centre, UOPEV, Brescia, Italy
J. Dagani
Affiliation:
IRCCS St John of God Clinical Research Centre, UOPEV, Brescia, Italy
F. Faustini
Affiliation:
IRCCS St John of God Clinical Research Centre, UOPEV, Brescia, Italy

Abstract

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Objective

To evaluate the length of the interval between the onset and the initial management of bipolar disorder (BD).

Method

We conducted a meta-analysis using the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses guidelines. Systematic searches located studies reporting estimates of the age of onset (AOO) and indicators of the age at initial management of BD. We calculated a pooled estimate of the interval between AOO and age at management. Factors influencing between-study heterogeneity were investigated using sensitivity analyses, meta-regression, and multiple meta–regression.

Results

Twenty-seven studies, reporting 51 samples and a total of 9415 patients, met the inclusion criteria. The pooled estimate for the interval between the onset of BD and its management was 5–8 years (standardized difference, .53; 95% confidence interval, .45 to .62). There was very high between-sample heterogeneity (I2 ¼ 92.6; Q ¼ 672). A longer interval was found in studies that defined the onset according to the first episode (compared to onset of symptoms or illness) and defined management as age at diagnosis (rather than first treatment or first hospitalization). A longer interval was reported among more recently published studies, among studies that used a systematic method to establish the chronology of illness, among studies with a smaller proportion of bipolar I patients, and among studies with an earlier mean AOO.

Conclusions

There is currently little consistency in the way researchers report the AOO and initial management of BD. However, the large interval between onset and management of BD presents an opportunity for earlier intervention.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
Symposium: The natural history of bipolar disorders: from the age of onset to the long-term course
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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